| |
Shania Twain
Birth Place:
Timmins, Ontario, Canada
Date of Birth: August 28th, 1965
Trivia: Name "Shania" means "I'm on my
way" in Ojibwa
Famous for: Country and pop music singer
Welcome to The Shania Twain Picture
Pages!Born Eilleen Regina
Edwards, this glamorous Canadian country/pop star (her
first name is pronounced "Shu-nye-ah') grew up in the
mining town of Timmins. Before her musical career began
she planted trees with her Native American stepfather as
part of a forest crew. Poor even by rural Canadian
standards, her family made great sacrifices to support
her embryonic career. She took a job at the Deerhurst
resort in northern Ontario as the headline vocalist in a
variety of musical productions. Afterwards she
concentrated on country music, employing her friend and
former performer Mary Bailey as her manager. Bailey put
her in contact with attorney Dick Frank in 1991, leading
to a demo tape recorded in Nashville with songwriter and
producer Norro Wilson and Buddy Cannon, Mercury Records'
A&R manager. Both the tragedy of her parents death (they
were both killed in an automobile accident in November
1987) and their musical legacy were explored on her
debut, with songs written by Mike Reid and Kent Robbins.
The album's best song, "God Ain't Gonna Get You For
That", was the only one part-composed by the artist,
pointing the way to future artistic growth.
Twain's follow-up album, The Woman In
Me, was an extraordinary crossover success in the USA,
not only when it was first released, but over a year
later when it went back to the top of the album charts
for another six months. Sales of this album had topped
10 million by 1998 and yielded four Top 10 country hits.
During that eventful year, Twain won most of the country
music awards, including the Entertainer Of The Year
trophy, and released her follow-up album, Come On Over.
"You're Still The One" was a crossover hit, peaking at
number 2 on the Billboard Hot 100 in May, and the album
became a permanent fixture in both the US and UK Top 10.
Another huge US hit, "From This Moment On", was the
single which broke Twain in the UK, debuting at number 9
in November. "That Don't Impress Me Much" and "Man! I
Feel Like A Woman" were also huge US/UK hit singles the
following year, and by March 2000 the album was
confirmed as both the bestselling album in country music
history, and the bestselling album ever by a female
artist. |
|